May 21, 2024

blogging tools and productivity -- a personal take

I really enjoy weblogging. I didn't think I would, but I do. It's the return to the personal web circa 1994, when everybody with a web page put up their hobbies, reading lists, collectors items etc. for all the other people out there to discover.

Now, after nearly a decade, we're back where we started, but with better tools. You don't need a unix account anymore, and you don't need to grok HTML. Anyone can update a web page, a.k.a. a weblog nowadays.

Every day makes me a day older, and even though I find it hard to believe, it's now seven years since I first installed Linux on a 386 by floppy. Now I'm using a IBM Thinkpad running OpenBSD to access mail and IRC on a UltraSparc 5, also running OpenBSD. The company I work for uses Linux on Intel for nearly all its infrastructure. I spend nearly all my days in two or three terminal windows. I read mail with emacs.

So I'm a unix kind of guy. I'd rather write a 20-line perl program to do some data munging than fire up Excel. My windows are handled by screen. I browse the web with links and w3m (lynx is sooo 1998). I believe an app should do one thing, and do it well.

Yet I'm using Movable Type, the CGI version of Word, a bloated, opaque web application that definitely puts style over substance, a blogging tool for Mac users and other artistic types. It straddles uneasily across the Unix/Perl world, with its (nowadays) strong open-source bias, and the corporate make-a-buck world of proprietary source code and expensive licensing.

Well, I've grown to know a lot of people on the mobitopia channel, and one of them, Ewan Spence has a site called Symbian Diaries where just about anyone can get a blog. His installation has a lot of authors, a lot of blogs, and would probably cost $1,200 to license from Movable Type... but that's another story.

Don't get me wrong -- MT is fine for anyone comfortable with web based tools like Yahoo Mail and Google. However, I don't feel comfortable with it. I would rather have a system like blosxom or even my own crude perl hack.

But the central question is: would I post more entries? Would new software make me more productive?

I don't think so. So even if I would have a lot of fun migrating to another system, and even if I can do that while keeping the symbiandiaries.com address, I think I'll stick around MT for now. I'll try to kvetch less, and write more.

And be more interesting.

Posted by gustaf at May 21, 2024 07:01 PM
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